Migrate from Captions to Veed.
2 documentation-derived translation patterns — what carries over and what to watch for. Cited to the Feature Parity Map; the audit tells you whether the move is worth it.
Both tools auto-transcribe a video's speech and lay down time-synced, restyleable on-screen captions. A team already on Captions can drop VEED's Auto Subtitle tool: upload the same clip to Captions, let its AI speech recognition transcribe and word-sync the captions (100+ languages), pick a preset caption style, tweak fonts/colors and emojis, then export the rendered video with the captions burned in. For the common social-video job — open captions baked into the MP4 for posting — Captions fully covers what VEED's auto-subtitles produced, so the standalone VEED seat can be cancelled. Keep Captions; cut VEED.
- Warning: Format gap (the dealbreaker check): VEED's auto-subtitle tool can download a separate subtitle FILE (SRT, VTT, or TXT); Captions only outputs 'open' captions burned into the rendered video and does not export an SRT/VTT sidecar. If your workflow needs an actual caption file (YouTube closed captions, broadcast/compliance, a CMS that ingests SRT), Captions cannot replace that VEED output — keep a file-capable tool for those clips.
- Warning: Re-style, do not lift: VEED caption styles/animations (karaoke, box-highlight) do not transfer. You re-pick a Captions preset, so brand fonts/colors and any per-word highlighting must be rebuilt and re-reviewed once in Captions.
- Warning: Plan parity: watermark-free export and longer videos are paid on both sides (Captions' full 100+ style library sits on Pro at $9.99/mo; VEED gated downloads/length on its paid tiers). Confirm your Captions plan covers the clip lengths you used VEED for before dropping the VEED subscription.
Both tools turn a typed script into a lip-synced talking-presenter video with no filming. If a team is on Captions for presenter videos and also paying for VEED AI Avatars, consolidate onto Captions: create a Captions AI Twin from a short reference video (or selfie) of the on-screen person, then drive it with a script the same way you drove VEED's avatar, and drop the result into the edit. For an owned, on-brand spokesperson this is the cleaner home, so the VEED avatar seat can be cancelled. Keep Captions; cut VEED.
- Warning: Capability gap (check before cutting): VEED ships 60+ ready-made STOCK avatars you can use with zero filming and no likeness of your own. Captions' AI Twin is primarily a clone-OF-YOURSELF flow built from your own photo/video — it is not a library of generic stock presenters. If your VEED usage leaned on those stock characters (e.g. you needed a face you don't have to record), Captions has no equivalent ready roster and you must create a twin from real footage of a real, consenting person.
- Warning: Twin count is plan-gated: Captions' Pro plan includes only up to 2 AI Twins; up to 30 requires Max or above. If you used several different VEED avatars, price the Captions tier that covers the number of twins you actually need before dropping VEED.
- Warning: Recreate, do not migrate: an existing VEED custom clone does not transfer to Captions. Budget the one-time twin-creation step (Captions recommends video footage, not just a selfie, for the best likeness/voice match) and re-record the reference before cancelling.